Wayne Youle: States of Play - Art Collector

Issue 72, April - June 2015

Wayne Youle is a man that mirrors his art – a man full of unexpected and surprising ideas in a perpetual state of evolution. Youle’s ability to move with ease between concept and medium, Mark Amery discovers, is what makes his work so compelling. Portrait by Joseph Kelly.

Ever prodigious, always playful and surprising, over 15 years New Zealand artist Wayne Youle has explored cultural branding, popular culture and art history. How we represent and misrepresent ourselves.

Considering how identity is visualised and exchanged, Youle works across every conceivable media. Appropriating and flattening things down to their tattoo outline, brightly heightening their edges, he provides visual puzzles, boldly twisting both the ideas of the modernists, his artistic contemporaries and the design industry. Provocative but smart, his witty highly finished treatment of our badges of identity challenge simplistic readings of culture.

Graduating from design school in Wellington in 1999, Youle went directly into establishing a professional art practice for which he has consistently gained attention with significant public and commercial exhibitions. Today Youle is as at ease with big public commissions as he is making small collages.

Youle describes himself as a worker: interested in putting things together to see how they work. He has both the Warholian visual pop sensibility and the work ethic.

“I’m not very good at just sitting on an idea. Even though 99 per cent of them never get seen, I make something and see if it’s going to work. In your own quiet space and time you self edit.”

Over Skype from his home in Amberley, North Canterbury, Youle talks like he works: fast, always shifting and surprising, ideas jumping off one another. Conversation always turns back to his home life. His work, he says, is always “sparked” by family – stories, his sayings, what is happening around him and his bicultural heritage, Pakeha (New Zealand European) and Maori (Ngapuhi and Ngati Whakaeke). His most well known public work, commissioned by Christchurch Art Gallery, was a rather smart giant shadow board mural inspired by memories of his grandfather’s tool shed.

Early work was strong on the commodification of Maori culture, the sting in the tail of a 1990s post-modern wave of Maori artists, with Michael Parekowhai a clear influence. That interest remains a thread, but he also has broader concerns.
“It takes the public a long time to say ‘Hey, you’re not making those anymore!’ If anyone again asks me to make them a resin Tiki I’m going to die, you know? You don’t want to be the resin Tiki guy. Then suddenly you’re mural guy. And then you’re something else…
“You can come out of design or art school and be the trendy thing, but beyond that you just keep working. I go to the studio every day from seven to three. I don’t work weekends and I try to be as selfish with family time as I am work.”
Time with family is the inspiration for a new series for Sydney Contemporary in September. The work explores the shifts in how we value time through our lives.
“The trigger was seeing my old man slow down. Then with my children, it’s like the opposite: there’s no concept of time. You get home from the studio and its three hours on the ground playing Lego. There’s my mother with an apologetic ‘this is all I could do today’ while my son is saying ‘what can you do for me today?’”

The exhibition – likely to include Youle’s typical wide range of work – includes video of his father walking one kilometre beside him and his mother’s knitting.
“Last year I got my mum to start a strip with some really bright orange wool. I said ‘I just want you to knit for a year’. She would always say things like ‘I haven’t had a chance to do anything’ and I’d say, ‘there’s no expectation of time, it’s however long it’s going to be’. Now I have this massive roll of time, about 28 metres. A timeline. I really love the idea of being able to roll it out in both big and intimate spaces, showing the amount of time left, and the amount of time out.”
Youle has plenty of time pressure of his own: deadlines for a handful of big public art projects in Christchurch and Wellington. Ever eclectic, they include sculpture, light boxes, sound, moving image, painting and water fountains.

Youle is no stranger to Sydney. A residency at Artspace Sydney in 2012 produced collage work based on local history and talking to artists and Aboriginal elders. Refusing to be pinned down, they comprised painted and vinyl plastered-over cut-up historic images and found photographs, including allusions to dot paintings, Aboriginal groups huddled under brightly coloured blankets, a Kings Cross cowboy and a cluster of cut-out breasts. The title You be fact, I be fiction firmly stated the artist’s position.

Youle’s work for Sydney Contemporary is quite different again: “Not so grounded culturally or ethnically. It has this natural, universal physicality.”

As to upsetting what people might expect? “Well, I don’t really worry about what people will think, say or do.”